By Gyasi Ross
Unlike the times when my older Skin friends beat me up on the rez, I never fell to the ground or cried. My only reaction was an uncomfortable smile and me wondering why I didn’t look like everyone else.
I remember--in reaction to the teasing in the city--I concluded that I wanted to look like one of my white friends; I wanted to appear exactly like the majority of the kids that went to my school. I asked my dad to cut my hair short. Thereafter, I’d put tons and tons of Aqua Net into my wavy/frizzy hair to try to make it go straight so I could have the cool, lil’ sexy “one-banged” look like Sonny Crockett on “Miami Vice” (which still might be the best show of all time, FYI). I remembered how even my amazing older sister was self-conscious about her “Blackfeet-nose” before me; I now empathized with her and tried to avoid girls seeing my profile. I learned to suck in my bottom lip as well, to draw attention away from it. I tried to change my accent. I paid attention to my vocabulary so that I didn’t “ho” or “ayes.”
Too bad Ross didn't connect this problem with his previous essay on Disney's Pocahontas. What happens when children use taunts from the movie? When girls see Pocahontas as a standard to emulate? Nothing good, I bet.
The kids teasing Ross were the immediate source of his angst. But they got their ideas from the world around them as seen through the media. Cartoons, mascots, and products all convey the idea of Indians as big-nosed, dark-skinned oddities. Even noble images of chiefs portray Indians as outdated, out of fashion, and irrelevant.
For more on the subject, see The Harm of Native Stereotyping: Facts and Evidence.
Below: Gee, I wonder where kids get the idea that Indians have big noses and look funny?
1 comment:
Gimme an effin break. There are plenty ofays out there with "big-noses" and one of my favorites is Triple H of the WWE, as I am a fan of that show. Beside, there are plenty of whiteys who look just as funny as a caricatured idiot.
Racist ofays are weird aren't they?
GENO--
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